4.8 Article

Microbiota modulate sympathetic neurons via a gut-brain circuit

Journal

NATURE
Volume 583, Issue 7816, Pages 441-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2474-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) [K99 DK120869]
  2. NIH Virus Center [P40 OD010996]
  3. NIH F31 Kirchstein Fellowship
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) NIH grant [UL1TR001866]
  5. Philip M. Levine Fellowship
  6. Kavli Graduate Fellowship
  7. Kavli Postdoctoral Fellowship
  8. Anderson Graduate Fellowship
  9. Leon Levy Fellowship in Neuroscience
  10. Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust
  11. Kenneth Rainin Foundation
  12. Burroughs Wellcome Fund PATH Award [R01DK116646]
  13. Transformative grant [R01DK116646]

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Connections between the gut and brain monitor the intestinal tissue and its microbial and dietary content(1), regulating both physiological intestinal functions such as nutrient absorption and motility(2,3), and brain-wired feeding behaviour(2). It is therefore plausible that circuits exist to detect gut microorganisms and relay this information to areas of the central nervous system that, in turn, regulate gut physiology(4). Here we characterize the influence of the microbiota on enteric-associated neurons by combining gnotobiotic mouse models with transcriptomics, circuit-tracing methods and functional manipulations. We find that the gut microbiome modulates gut-extrinsic sympathetic neurons: microbiota depletion leads to increased expression of the neuronal transcription factor cFos, and colonization of germ-free mice with bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids suppresses cFos expression in the gut sympathetic ganglia. Chemogenetic manipulations, translational profiling and anterograde tracing identify a subset of distal intestine-projecting vagal neurons that are positioned to have an afferent role in microbiota-mediated modulation of gut sympathetic neurons. Retrograde polysynaptic neuronal tracing from the intestinal wall identifies brainstem sensory nuclei that are activated during microbial depletion, as well as efferent sympathetic premotor glutamatergic neurons that regulate gastrointestinal transit. These results reveal microbiota-dependent control of gut-extrinsic sympathetic activation through a gut-brain circuit.

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